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<h2> CHAPTER XXIII </h2>
<p>When Ralph Denham entered the room and saw Katharine seated with her back
to him, he was conscious of a change in the grade of the atmosphere such
as a traveler meets with sometimes upon the roads, particularly after
sunset, when, without warning, he runs from clammy chill to a hoard of
unspent warmth in which the sweetness of hay and beanfield is cherished,
as if the sun still shone although the moon is up. He hesitated; he
shuddered; he walked elaborately to the window and laid aside his coat. He
balanced his stick most carefully against the folds of the curtain. Thus
occupied with his own sensations and preparations, he had little time to
observe what either of the other two was feeling. Such symptoms of
agitation as he might perceive (and they had left their tokens in
brightness of eye and pallor of cheeks) seemed to him well befitting the
actors in so great a drama as that of Katharine Hilbery's daily life.
Beauty and passion were the breath of her being, he thought.</p>
<p>She scarcely noticed his presence, or only as it forced her to adopt a
manner of composure, which she was certainly far from feeling. William,
however, was even more agitated than she was, and her first instalment of
promised help took the form of some commonplace upon the age of the
building or the architect's name, which gave him an excuse to fumble in a
drawer for certain designs, which he laid upon the table between the three
of them.</p>
<p>Which of the three followed the designs most carefully it would be
difficult to tell, but it is certain that not one of the three found for
the moment anything to say. Years of training in a drawing-room came at
length to Katharine's help, and she said something suitable, at the same
moment withdrawing her hand from the table because she perceived that it
trembled. William agreed effusively; Denham corroborated him, speaking in
rather high-pitched tones; they thrust aside the plans, and drew nearer to
the fireplace.</p>
<p>"I'd rather live here than anywhere in the whole of London," said Denham.</p>
<p>("And I've got nowhere to live") Katharine thought, as she agreed aloud.</p>
<p>"You could get rooms here, no doubt, if you wanted to," Rodney replied.</p>
<p>"But I'm just leaving London for good—I've taken that cottage I was
telling you about." The announcement seemed to convey very little to
either of his hearers.</p>
<p>"Indeed?—that's sad.... You must give me your address. But you won't
cut yourself off altogether, surely—"</p>
<p>"You'll be moving, too, I suppose," Denham remarked.</p>
<p>William showed such visible signs of floundering that Katharine collected
herself and asked:</p>
<p>"Where is the cottage you've taken?"</p>
<p>In answering her, Denham turned and looked at her. As their eyes met, she
realized for the first time that she was talking to Ralph Denham, and she
remembered, without recalling any details, that she had been speaking of
him quite lately, and that she had reason to think ill of him. What Mary
had said she could not remember, but she felt that there was a mass of
knowledge in her mind which she had not had time to examine—knowledge
now lying on the far side of a gulf. But her agitation flashed the
queerest lights upon her past. She must get through the matter in hand,
and then think it out in quiet. She bent her mind to follow what Ralph was
saying. He was telling her that he had taken a cottage in Norfolk, and she
was saying that she knew, or did not know, that particular neighborhood.
But after a moment's attention her mind flew to Rodney, and she had an
unusual, indeed unprecedented, sense that they were in touch and shared
each other's thoughts. If only Ralph were not there, she would at once
give way to her desire to take William's hand, then to bend his head upon
her shoulder, for this was what she wanted to do more than anything at the
moment, unless, indeed, she wished more than anything to be alone—yes,
that was what she wanted. She was sick to death of these discussions; she
shivered at the effort to reveal her feelings. She had forgotten to
answer. William was speaking now.</p>
<p>"But what will you find to do in the country?" she asked at random,
striking into a conversation which she had only half heard, in such a way
as to make both Rodney and Denham look at her with a little surprise. But
directly she took up the conversation, it was William's turn to fall
silent. He at once forgot to listen to what they were saying, although he
interposed nervously at intervals, "Yes, yes, yes." As the minutes passed,
Ralph's presence became more and more intolerable to him, since there was
so much that he must say to Katharine; the moment he could not talk to
her, terrible doubts, unanswerable questions accumulated, which he must
lay before Katharine, for she alone could help him now. Unless he could
see her alone, it would be impossible for him ever to sleep, or to know
what he had said in a moment of madness, which was not altogether mad, or
was it mad? He nodded his head, and said, nervously, "Yes, yes," and
looked at Katharine, and thought how beautiful she looked; there was no
one in the world that he admired more. There was an emotion in her face
which lent it an expression he had never seen there. Then, as he was
turning over means by which he could speak to her alone, she rose, and he
was taken by surprise, for he had counted on the fact that she would
outstay Denham. His only chance, then, of saying something to her in
private, was to take her downstairs and walk with her to the street. While
he hesitated, however, overcome with the difficulty of putting one simple
thought into words when all his thoughts were scattered about, and all
were too strong for utterance, he was struck silent by something that was
still more unexpected. Denham got up from his chair, looked at Katharine,
and said:</p>
<p>"I'm going, too. Shall we go together?"</p>
<p>And before William could see any way of detaining him—or would it be
better to detain Katharine?—he had taken his hat, stick, and was
holding the door open for Katharine to pass out. The most that William
could do was to stand at the head of the stairs and say good-night. He
could not offer to go with them. He could not insist that she should stay.
He watched her descend, rather slowly, owing to the dusk of the staircase,
and he had a last sight of Denham's head and of Katharine's head near
together, against the panels, when suddenly a pang of acute jealousy
overcame him, and had he not remained conscious of the slippers upon his
feet, he would have run after them or cried out. As it was he could not
move from the spot. At the turn of the staircase Katharine turned to look
back, trusting to this last glance to seal their compact of good
friendship. Instead of returning her silent greeting, William grinned back
at her a cold stare of sarcasm or of rage.</p>
<p>She stopped dead for a moment, and then descended slowly into the court.
She looked to the right and to the left, and once up into the sky. She was
only conscious of Denham as a block upon her thoughts. She measured the
distance that must be traversed before she would be alone. But when they
came to the Strand no cabs were to be seen, and Denham broke the silence
by saying:</p>
<p>"There seem to be no cabs. Shall we walk on a little?"</p>
<p>"Very well," she agreed, paying no attention to him.</p>
<p>Aware of her preoccupation, or absorbed in his own thoughts, Ralph said
nothing further; and in silence they walked some distance along the
Strand. Ralph was doing his best to put his thoughts into such order that
one came before the rest, and the determination that when he spoke he
should speak worthily, made him put off the moment of speaking till he had
found the exact words and even the place that best suited him. The Strand
was too busy. There was too much risk, also, of finding an empty cab.
Without a word of explanation he turned to the left, down one of the side
streets leading to the river. On no account must they part until something
of the very greatest importance had happened. He knew perfectly well what
he wished to say, and had arranged not only the substance, but the order
in which he was to say it. Now, however, that he was alone with her, not
only did he find the difficulty of speaking almost insurmountable, but he
was aware that he was angry with her for thus disturbing him, and casting,
as it was so easy for a person of her advantages to do, these phantoms and
pitfalls across his path. He was determined that he would question her as
severely as he would question himself; and make them both, once and for
all, either justify her dominance or renounce it. But the longer they
walked thus alone, the more he was disturbed by the sense of her actual
presence. Her skirt blew; the feathers in her hat waved; sometimes he saw
her a step or two ahead of him, or had to wait for her to catch him up.</p>
<p>The silence was prolonged, and at length drew her attention to him. First
she was annoyed that there was no cab to free her from his company; then
she recalled vaguely something that Mary had said to make her think ill of
him; she could not remember what, but the recollection, combined with his
masterful ways—why did he walk so fast down this side street?—made
her more and more conscious of a person of marked, though disagreeable,
force by her side. She stopped and, looking round her for a cab, sighted
one in the distance. He was thus precipitated into speech.</p>
<p>"Should you mind if we walked a little farther?" he asked. "There's
something I want to say to you."</p>
<p>"Very well," she replied, guessing that his request had something to do
with Mary Datchet.</p>
<p>"It's quieter by the river," he said, and instantly he crossed over. "I
want to ask you merely this," he began. But he paused so long that she
could see his head against the sky; the slope of his thin cheek and his
large, strong nose were clearly marked against it. While he paused, words
that were quite different from those he intended to use presented
themselves.</p>
<p>"I've made you my standard ever since I saw you. I've dreamt about you;
I've thought of nothing but you; you represent to me the only reality in
the world."</p>
<p>His words, and the queer strained voice in which he spoke them, made it
appear as if he addressed some person who was not the woman beside him,
but some one far away.</p>
<p>"And now things have come to such a pass that, unless I can speak to you
openly, I believe I shall go mad. I think of you as the most beautiful,
the truest thing in the world," he continued, filled with a sense of
exaltation, and feeling that he had no need now to choose his words with
pedantic accuracy, for what he wanted to say was suddenly become plain to
him.</p>
<p>"I see you everywhere, in the stars, in the river; to me you're everything
that exists; the reality of everything. Life, I tell you, would be
impossible without you. And now I want—"</p>
<p>She had heard him so far with a feeling that she had dropped some material
word which made sense of the rest. She could hear no more of this
unintelligible rambling without checking him. She felt that she was
overhearing what was meant for another.</p>
<p>"I don't understand," she said. "You're saying things that you don't
mean."</p>
<p>"I mean every word I say," he replied, emphatically. He turned his head
towards her. She recovered the words she was searching for while he spoke.
"Ralph Denham is in love with you." They came back to her in Mary
Datchet's voice. Her anger blazed up in her.</p>
<p>"I saw Mary Datchet this afternoon," she exclaimed.</p>
<p>He made a movement as if he were surprised or taken aback, but answered in
a moment:</p>
<p>"She told you that I had asked her to marry me, I suppose?"</p>
<p>"No!" Katharine exclaimed, in surprise.</p>
<p>"I did though. It was the day I saw you at Lincoln," he continued. "I had
meant to ask her to marry me, and then I looked out of the window and saw
you. After that I didn't want to ask any one to marry me. But I did it;
and she knew I was lying, and refused me. I thought then, and still think,
that she cares for me. I behaved very badly. I don't defend myself."</p>
<p>"No," said Katharine, "I should hope not. There's no defence that I can
think of. If any conduct is wrong, that is." She spoke with an energy that
was directed even more against herself than against him. "It seems to me,"
she continued, with the same energy, "that people are bound to be honest.
There's no excuse for such behavior." She could now see plainly before her
eyes the expression on Mary Datchet's face.</p>
<p>After a short pause, he said:</p>
<p>"I am not telling you that I am in love with you. I am not in love with
you."</p>
<p>"I didn't think that," she replied, conscious of some bewilderment.</p>
<p>"I have not spoken a word to you that I do not mean," he added.</p>
<p>"Tell me then what it is that you mean," she said at length.</p>
<p>As if obeying a common instinct, they both stopped and, bending slightly
over the balustrade of the river, looked into the flowing water.</p>
<p>"You say that we've got to be honest," Ralph began. "Very well. I will try
to tell you the facts; but I warn you, you'll think me mad. It's a fact,
though, that since I first saw you four or five months ago I have made
you, in an utterly absurd way, I expect, my ideal. I'm almost ashamed to
tell you what lengths I've gone to. It's become the thing that matters
most in my life." He checked himself. "Without knowing you, except that
you're beautiful, and all that, I've come to believe that we're in some
sort of agreement; that we're after something together; that we see
something.... I've got into the habit of imagining you; I'm always
thinking what you'd say or do; I walk along the street talking to you; I
dream of you. It's merely a bad habit, a schoolboy habit, day-dreaming;
it's a common experience; half one's friends do the same; well, those are
the facts."</p>
<p>Simultaneously, they both walked on very slowly.</p>
<p>"If you were to know me you would feel none of this," she said. "We don't
know each other—we've always been—interrupted.... Were you
going to tell me this that day my aunts came?" she asked, recollecting the
whole scene.</p>
<p>He bowed his head.</p>
<p>"The day you told me of your engagement," he said.</p>
<p>She thought, with a start, that she was no longer engaged.</p>
<p>"I deny that I should cease to feel this if I knew you," he went on. "I
should feel it more reasonably—that's all. I shouldn't talk the kind
of nonsense I've talked to-night.... But it wasn't nonsense. It was the
truth," he said doggedly. "It's the important thing. You can force me to
talk as if this feeling for you were an hallucination, but all our
feelings are that. The best of them are half illusions. Still," he added,
as if arguing to himself, "if it weren't as real a feeling as I'm capable
of, I shouldn't be changing my life on your account."</p>
<p>"What do you mean?" she inquired.</p>
<p>"I told you. I'm taking a cottage. I'm giving up my profession."</p>
<p>"On my account?" she asked, in amazement.</p>
<p>"Yes, on your account," he replied. He explained his meaning no further.</p>
<p>"But I don't know you or your circumstances," she said at last, as he
remained silent.</p>
<p>"You have no opinion about me one way or the other?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I suppose I have an opinion—" she hesitated.</p>
<p>He controlled his wish to ask her to explain herself, and much to his
pleasure she went on, appearing to search her mind.</p>
<p>"I thought that you criticized me—perhaps disliked me. I thought of
you as a person who judges—"</p>
<p>"No; I'm a person who feels," he said, in a low voice.</p>
<p>"Tell me, then, what has made you do this?" she asked, after a break.</p>
<p>He told her in an orderly way, betokening careful preparation, all that he
had meant to say at first; how he stood with regard to his brothers and
sisters; what his mother had said, and his sister Joan had refrained from
saying; exactly how many pounds stood in his name at the bank; what
prospect his brother had of earning a livelihood in America; how much of
their income went on rent, and other details known to him by heart. She
listened to all this, so that she could have passed an examination in it
by the time Waterloo Bridge was in sight; and yet she was no more
listening to it than she was counting the paving-stones at her feet. She
was feeling happier than she had felt in her life. If Denham could have
seen how visibly books of algebraic symbols, pages all speckled with dots
and dashes and twisted bars, came before her eyes as they trod the
Embankment, his secret joy in her attention might have been dispersed. She
went on, saying, "Yes, I see.... But how would that help you?... Your
brother has passed his examination?" so sensibly, that he had constantly
to keep his brain in check; and all the time she was in fancy looking up
through a telescope at white shadow-cleft disks which were other worlds,
until she felt herself possessed of two bodies, one walking by the river
with Denham, the other concentrated to a silver globe aloft in the fine
blue space above the scum of vapors that was covering the visible world.
She looked at the sky once, and saw that no star was keen enough to pierce
the flight of watery clouds now coursing rapidly before the west wind. She
looked down hurriedly again. There was no reason, she assured herself, for
this feeling of happiness; she was not free; she was not alone; she was
still bound to earth by a million fibres; every step took her nearer home.
Nevertheless, she exulted as she had never exulted before. The air was
fresher, the lights more distinct, the cold stone of the balustrade colder
and harder, when by chance or purpose she struck her hand against it. No
feeling of annoyance with Denham remained; he certainly did not hinder any
flight she might choose to make, whether in the direction of the sky or of
her home; but that her condition was due to him, or to anything that he
had said, she had no consciousness at all.</p>
<p>They were now within sight of the stream of cabs and omnibuses crossing to
and from the Surrey side of the river; the sound of the traffic, the
hooting of motor-horns, and the light chime of tram-bells sounded more and
more distinctly, and, with the increase of noise, they both became silent.
With a common instinct they slackened their pace, as if to lengthen the
time of semi-privacy allowed them. To Ralph, the pleasure of these last
yards of the walk with Katharine was so great that he could not look
beyond the present moment to the time when she should have left him. He
had no wish to use the last moments of their companionship in adding fresh
words to what he had already said. Since they had stopped talking, she had
become to him not so much a real person, as the very woman he dreamt of;
but his solitary dreams had never produced any such keenness of sensation
as that which he felt in her presence. He himself was also strangely
transfigured. He had complete mastery of all his faculties. For the first
time he was in possession of his full powers. The vistas which opened
before him seemed to have no perceptible end. But the mood had none of the
restlessness or feverish desire to add one delight to another which had
hitherto marked, and somewhat spoilt, the most rapturous of his
imaginings. It was a mood that took such clear-eyed account of the
conditions of human life that he was not disturbed in the least by the
gliding presence of a taxicab, and without agitation he perceived that
Katharine was conscious of it also, and turned her head in that direction.
Their halting steps acknowledged the desirability of engaging the cab; and
they stopped simultaneously, and signed to it.</p>
<p>"Then you will let me know your decision as soon as you can?" he asked,
with his hand on the door.</p>
<p>She hesitated for a moment. She could not immediately recall what the
question was that she had to decide.</p>
<p>"I will write," she said vaguely. "No," she added, in a second, bethinking
her of the difficulties of writing anything decided upon a question to
which she had paid no attention, "I don't see how to manage it."</p>
<p>She stood looking at Denham, considering and hesitating, with her foot
upon the step. He guessed her difficulties; he knew in a second that she
had heard nothing; he knew everything that she felt.</p>
<p>"There's only one place to discuss things satisfactorily that I know of,"
he said quickly; "that's Kew."</p>
<p>"Kew?"</p>
<p>"Kew," he repeated, with immense decision. He shut the door and gave her
address to the driver. She instantly was conveyed away from him, and her
cab joined the knotted stream of vehicles, each marked by a light, and
indistinguishable one from the other. He stood watching for a moment, and
then, as if swept by some fierce impulse, from the spot where they had
stood, he turned, crossed the road at a rapid pace, and disappeared.</p>
<p>He walked on upon the impetus of this last mood of almost supernatural
exaltation until he reached a narrow street, at this hour empty of traffic
and passengers. Here, whether it was the shops with their shuttered
windows, the smooth and silvered curve of the wood pavement, or a natural
ebb of feeling, his exaltation slowly oozed and deserted him. He was now
conscious of the loss that follows any revelation; he had lost something
in speaking to Katharine, for, after all, was the Katharine whom he loved
the same as the real Katharine? She had transcended her entirely at
moments; her skirt had blown, her feather waved, her voice spoken; yes,
but how terrible sometimes the pause between the voice of one's dreams and
the voice that comes from the object of one's dreams! He felt a mixture of
disgust and pity at the figure cut by human beings when they try to carry
out, in practice, what they have the power to conceive. How small both he
and Katharine had appeared when they issued from the cloud of thought that
enveloped them! He recalled the small, inexpressive, commonplace words in
which they had tried to communicate with each other; he repeated them over
to himself. By repeating Katharine's words, he came in a few moments to
such a sense of her presence that he worshipped her more than ever. But
she was engaged to be married, he remembered with a start. The strength of
his feeling was revealed to him instantly, and he gave himself up to an
irresistible rage and sense of frustration. The image of Rodney came
before him with every circumstance of folly and indignity. That little
pink-cheeked dancing-master to marry Katharine? that gibbering ass with
the face of a monkey on an organ? that posing, vain, fantastical fop? with
his tragedies and his comedies, his innumerable spites and prides and
pettinesses? Lord! marry Rodney! She must be as great a fool as he was.
His bitterness took possession of him, and as he sat in the corner of the
underground carriage, he looked as stark an image of unapproachable
severity as could be imagined. Directly he reached home he sat down at his
table, and began to write Katharine a long, wild, mad letter, begging her
for both their sakes to break with Rodney, imploring her not to do what
would destroy for ever the one beauty, the one truth, the one hope; not to
be a traitor, not to be a deserter, for if she were—and he wound up
with a quiet and brief assertion that, whatever she did or left undone, he
would believe to be the best, and accept from her with gratitude. He
covered sheet after sheet, and heard the early carts starting for London
before he went to bed.</p>
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